Raw Marijuana Juice & Clinical Cannabinoid Deficiency

Juicing raw marijuana plants is gaining popularity because raw marijuana juice is said to cure many health problems.

Much like juicing veggies and fruits, or the “raw food diet,” juicing marijuana preserves vital cannabis compounds and enzymes that are compromised or chemically altered by traditional marijuana ingestion methods, such as smoking marijuana.

Some experts claim a diet saturated with raw marijuana juice may treat an alleged biochemical disorder called “Clinical Cannabinoid Deficiency.”

This purported syndrome is complicated and hard to explain.

One basic fact is that our bodies produce a natural compound that was given the name anandamide.

Anandamide is the body’s self-produced triggering chemical for our endocannabinoid system, which is a system of neuroreceptors that bind with anandamide.

Unique compounds created in cannabis known as cannabinoids also bind to the endocannabinoid system.

When that binding happens, it produces changes in mood, temperature, appetite, muscle tone, and other important body functions.

Some people theorize that some illnesses come because a person’s body doesn’t produce enough anandamide, creating clinical cannabinoid deficiency.

This is similar to the claim that depression is caused when the body doesn’t produce enough serotonin or other neurotransmitters.

The real fix would be to stimulate the body’s production of anandamide or other deficient internal neurotransmitters without having to add external mimics of those neurotransmitters, or pharma drugs, into the mix.

But those who advocate using raw cannabis juice for clinical cannabinoid deficiency have a different approach.

The positive results she experienced from medical marijuana gave her the confidence to go cold turkey on all her prescriptions and move to California in order to have access to clinics that provide medical marijuana treatment.

Eventually, she came under the care of Dr. Courtney and this began the raw cannabis experiment.

Pekuski says raw cannabis saved her life because what she really suffered from was a cannabinoid deficiency disorder.

Emerging information about endogenous cannabinoids has revealed their role to be much more important in human biology and health than ever suspected before.

For example, both anorexia and bulimia have been partially attributed to what some claim is an imbalance of the endocannabinoid system.

Endocannabinoids are naturally occurring and affect a number of physiological processes, including appetite and pain sensation.

The CB1 receptors that accept chemical messages from endocannabinoids do not distinguish whether the cannabinoids have been produced naturally inside the body, or whether they’re coming in from outside the body.

This is why ingesting cannabis allows the brain to send the same messages as it would if the endocannabinoid system were not malfunctioning.

Dr. Courtney isn’t the only one working to better understand these discoveries.

Ethnobionist, professor, and author Chris Kilham wrote an article asking whether cannabis is only a treatment for diseases, or whether it actually cures diseases that are allegedly caused by deficiencies of anandamide.

While the general thinking has been that marijuana eases symptoms of various illnesses, the questions have now turned into whether medical marijuana might be an additive fix for the body’s biochemical neurotransmitter problems.

For Dr. Courtney and Kristen Peskuski, the results pointed in that direction.

Moreover, it was the method of ingestion that may have been equally revealing.

Smoking marijuana or using other forms of marijuana such as dabs, tinctures, bubblehash, live resins, etc., that have been activated to change the chemical structure of cannabinoids isn’t a good way to get the massive doses of raw cannabinoids and terpenoids delivered via juicing.

As it is, within the natural makeup of a just-harvested cannabis plant, THC and other cannabinoids exist in a form that’s not generally psychoactive.

When marijuana is heated or exposed to other activators, the cannabinoids change, and the marijuana becomes psychoactive.

Dr. Courtney’s work, and the ultimate efficacy of raw marijuana juice, have not yet been proven in large-scale clinical studies.

And there are many of us who’ve found that ingesting uncooked, unheated, raw marijuana juice causes stomach problems.

Some raw cannabis juice users report that they did get high, similar to how you get high when you eat marijuana medibles.

A sizable percentage of the raw marijuana juice advocacy community are people who believe that marijuana euphoria and other psychoactive effects are undesirable.

They’re in the same camp as GW Pharmaceuticals and others, who work hard to make products that deliver some cannabinoids that have medical benefits, without getting you stoned.

I’m not convinced yet that juicing raw cannabis has all the benefits its advocates say it does, but obviously more research should be done on raw marijuana juice.

Marijuana is a miracle plant, and generates uniquely healing compounds.

Raw marijuana juice could well be medicinal and nutritional, and we hope scientists find out for sure if it is, very soon!

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